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Dive into the research topics where Edwin S. Levitan is active.

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Featured researches published by Edwin S. Levitan.


Neuron | 1997

Neuronal Peptide Release Is Limited by Secretory Granule Mobility

Nancy V Burke; Weiping Han; Danqing Li; Koichi Takimoto; Simon C. Watkins; Edwin S. Levitan

Neuropeptides are slowly released from a limited pool of secretory granules. To visualize this process, GFP-tagged preproatrial natriuretic factor (ANF) was expressed in nerve growth factor-treated PC12 cells. Biochemical and microfluorimetric experiments demonstrate that proANF-EGFP is packaged in granules that accumulate at neurite endings and is released in a Ca2+-dependent manner by secretagogs. Confocal microscopy shows that secretion is associated with depletion of granules distributed throughout the terminal. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and time-lapse particle tracking reveal that only a subpopulation of cytoplasmic secretory granules, similar in size to the releasable pool, can move quickly enough (D = 6 x 10(-11) cm2/s) to support release. Therefore, sustained secretory responses are limited by the number of mobile granules and their slow rate of diffusion.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Peroxynitrite-Induced Neuronal Apoptosis Is Mediated by Intracellular Zinc Release and 12-Lipoxygenase Activation

Yumin Zhang; Hong Wang; Jianrong Li; Daniel A. Jimenez; Edwin S. Levitan; Elias Aizenman; Paul A. Rosenberg

Peroxynitrite toxicity is a major cause of neuronal injury in stroke and neurodegenerative disorders. The mechanisms underlying the neurotoxicity induced by peroxynitrite are still unclear. In this study, we observed that TPEN [N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis (2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine], a zinc chelator, protected against neurotoxicity induced by exogenous as well as endogenous (coadministration of NMDA and a nitric oxide donor, diethylenetriamine NONOate) peroxynitrite. Two different approaches to detecting intracellular zinc release demonstrated the liberation of zinc from intracellular stores by peroxynitrite. In addition, we found that peroxynitrite toxicity was blocked by inhibitors of 12-lipoxygenase (12-LOX), p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and caspase-3 and was associated with mitochondrial membrane depolarization. Inhibition of 12-LOX blocked the activation of p38 MAPK and caspase-3. Zinc itself induced the activation of 12-LOX, generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and activation of p38 MAPK and caspase-3. These data suggest a cell death pathway triggered by peroxynitrite in which intracellular zinc release leads to activation of 12-LOX, ROS accumulation, p38 activation, and caspase-3 activation. Therefore, therapies aimed at maintaining intracellular zinc homeostasis or blocking activation of 12-LOX may provide a novel avenue for the treatment of inflammation, stroke, and neurodegenerative diseases in which the formation of peroxynitrite is thought to be one of the important causes of cell death.


Neuron | 2004

Streamlined synaptic vesicle cycle in cone photoreceptor terminals

Ruth Rea; Jian Li; Ajay Dharia; Edwin S. Levitan; Peter Sterling; Richard H. Kramer

Cone photoreceptors tonically release neurotransmitter in the dark through a continuous cycle of exocytosis and endocytosis. Here, using the synaptic vesicle marker FM1-43, we elucidate specialized features of the vesicle cycle. Unlike retinal bipolar cell terminals, where stimulation triggers bulk membrane retrieval, cone terminals appear to exclusively endocytose small vesicles. These retain their integrity until exocytosis, without pooling their membranes in endosomes. Endocytosed vesicles rapidly disperse through the terminal and are reused with no apparent delay. Unlike other synapses where most vesicles are immobilized and held in reserve, only a small fraction (<15%) becomes immobilized in cones. Photobleaching experiments suggest that vesicles move by diffusion and not by molecular motors on the cytoskeleton and that vesicle movement is not rate limiting for release. The huge reservoir of vesicles that move rapidly throughout cone terminals and the lack of a reserve pool are unique features, providing cones with a steady supply for continuous release.


Circulation Research | 1997

Decreased Expression of Kv4.2 and Novel Kv4.3 K+ Channel Subunit mRNAs in Ventricles of Renovascular Hypertensive Rats

Koichi Takimoto; Danqing Li; Kenneth M. Hershman; Ping Li; Edwin K. Jackson; Edwin S. Levitan

Hypertension-induced cardiac hypertrophy is associated with alterations in ventricular action potentials. To understand molecular mechanisms underlying this electrical abnormality, expression of cardiac voltage-gated K+ channel subunit genes was examined in ventricles of renovascular hypertensive rats. While generating a rat Kv4.3 probe, we discovered a previously unreported 19-amino acid insertion in the C-terminal intracellular region of the channel subunit. RNase protection assays indicated that this novel isoform is predominant in rat lung and heart. Effects of renovascular hypertension were then determined by using renal artery clipping models: two-kidney, one clip (2K-1C) rats, a model of high-renin hypertension with a normal plasma volume, and one-kidney, one clip (1K-1C) rats, a model of normal renin with a raised plasma volume. Expression of Kv4.2 and Kv4.3 mRNAs was diminished by > 50% in ventricles of 2K-1C rats; however, no changes in the expression of Kv1.2, Kv1.4, Kv1.5, Kv2.1, or KvLQT1 mRNAs were detected. Similar downregulation of Kv4.2 and Kv4.3 mRNAs was detected in 1K-1C rats. Chronic administration of captopril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, blocked the development of hypertension and the suppression of Kv4 subfamily channel mRNA expression in 2K-1C rats. Furthermore, captopril administration to sham-operated rats significantly increased Kv4.2 mRNA. These results indicate that renovascular hypertension causes specific reductions in Kv4 subfamily channel mRNA expression and that this effect is likely to be mediated primarily by an increase in cardiac afterload.


Neuron | 1993

Dexamethasone rapidly induces Kv1.5 K+ channel gene transcription and expression in clonal pituitary cells

Koichi Takimoto; Alla F. Fomina; Robert Gealy; James S. Trimmer; Edwin S. Levitan

Glucocorticoids specifically increase Kv1.5 K+ channel mRNA in normal and clonal (GH3) rat pituitary cells. Here, we demonstrate that dexamethasone, a glucocorticoid agonist, rapidly induces Kv1.5 gene transcription, but does not affect Kv1.5 mRNA turnover (t1/2 approximately 0.5 hr) in GH3 cells. Immunoblots indicate that the steroid also increases the expression of the 76 kd Kv1.5 protein approximately 3-fold within 12 hr without altering its half-life (t1/2 approximately 4 hr). In contrast, Kv1.4 protein expression is unaffected. Finally, we find that the induction of Kv1.5 protein is associated with an increase in a noninactivating component of the voltage-gated K+ current. Our results indicate that hormones and neurotransmitters may act within hours to regulate excitability by controlling K+ channel gene expression.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Cav1.3 Channel Voltage Dependence, Not Ca2+ Selectivity, Drives Pacemaker Activity and Amplifies Bursts in Nigral Dopamine Neurons

Ilva Putzier; Paul H. M. Kullmann; John P. Horn; Edwin S. Levitan

Cav1.3 (α1D) L-type Ca2+ channels have been implicated in substantia nigra (SN) dopamine (DA) neuron pacemaking and vulnerability to Parkinsons disease. These effects may arise from the depolarizing current and cytoplasmic Ca2+ elevation produced by Cav1.3 channels at subthreshold membrane potentials. However, the assumption that the Ca2+ selectivity of Cav1.3 channels is essential has not been tested. In this study the properties of SN DA neuron L-type Ca2+ channels responsible for driving pacemaker activity in juvenile rat brain slices were probed by replacing native channels blocked with the dihydropyridine nimodipine with virtual channels generated by dynamic clamp. Surprisingly, virtual L-type channels that mimic native and recombinant Cav1.3 channels supported pacemaker activity even though dynamic clamp currents are not carried by Ca2+. This effect is specific because pacemaker activity could not be restored by tonic current injection, virtual nonselective leak channels or virtual NMDA receptors, which share with L-type channels a negative slope conductance region in their current–voltage (I–V) curve. Altering virtual channels showed that the production of pacemaker activity depended on the characteristic voltage dependence of DA neuron L-type channels, while activation kinetics and reversal potential were not critical parameters. Virtual L-type channels also supported slow oscillatory potentials and enhanced firing rate during evoked bursts. Thus, Cav1.3 channel voltage dependence, rather than Ca2+ selectivity, drives pacemaker activity and amplifies bursts in SN DA neurons.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Apoptotic surge of potassium currents is mediated by p38 phosphorylation of Kv2.1

Patrick T. Redman; Kai He; Karen A. Hartnett; Bahiyya S. Jefferson; Linda Hu; Paul A. Rosenberg; Edwin S. Levitan; Elias Aizenman

Kv2.1, the primary delayed rectifying potassium channel in neurons, is extensively regulated by phosphorylation. Previous reports have described Kv2.1 phosphorylation events affecting channel gating and the impact of this process on cellular excitability. Kv2.1, however, also provides the critical exit route for potassium ions during neuronal apoptosis via p38 MAPK-dependent membrane insertion, resulting in a pronounced enhancement of K+ currents. Here, electrophysiological and viability studies using Kv2.1 channel mutants identify a p38 phosphorylation site at Ser-800 (S800) that is required for Kv2.1 membrane insertion, K+ current surge, and cell death. In addition, a phospho-specific antibody for S800 detects a p38-dependent increase in Kv2.1 phosphorylation in apoptotic neurons and reveals phosphorylation of S800 in immunopurified channels incubated with active p38. Consequently, phosphorylation of Kv2.1 residue S800 by p38 leads to trafficking and membrane insertion during apoptosis, and remarkably, the absence of S800 phosphorylation is sufficient to prevent completion of the cell death program.


Nature Neuroscience | 2005

Activity-dependent liberation of synaptic neuropeptide vesicles

Dinara Shakiryanova; Arvonn Tully; Randall S. Hewes; David L. Deitcher; Edwin S. Levitan

Despite the importance of neuropeptide release, which is evoked by long bouts of action potential activity and which regulates behavior, peptidergic vesicle movement has not been examined in living nerve terminals. Previous in vitro studies have found that secretory vesicle motion at many sites of release is constitutive: Ca2+ does not affect the movement of small synaptic vesicles in nerve terminals or the movement of large dense core vesicles in growth cones and endocrine cells. However, in vivo imaging of a neuropeptide, atrial natriuretic factor, tagged with green fluorescent protein in larval Drosophila melanogaster neuromuscular junctions shows that peptidergic vesicle behavior in nerve terminals is sensitive to activity-induced Ca2+ influx. Specifically, peptidergic vesicles are immobile in resting synaptic boutons but become mobile after seconds of stimulation. Vesicle movement is undirected, occurs without the use of axonal transport motors or F-actin, and aids in the depletion of undocked neuropeptide vesicles. Peptidergic vesicle mobilization and post-tetanic potentiation of neuropeptide release are sustained for minutes.


Cell | 2012

Neuropeptide delivery to synapses by long-range vesicle circulation and sporadic capture.

Man Yan Wong; Chaoming Zhou; Dinara Shakiryanova; Thomas E. Lloyd; David L. Deitcher; Edwin S. Levitan

Neurotransmission requires anterograde axonal transport of dense core vesicles (DCVs) containing neuropeptides and active zone components from the soma to nerve terminals. However, it is puzzling how one-way traffic could uniformly supply sequential release sites called en passant boutons. Here, Drosophila neuropeptide-containing DCVs are tracked in vivo for minutes with a new method called simultaneous photobleaching and imaging (SPAIM). Surprisingly, anterograde DCVs typically bypass proximal boutons to accumulate initially in the most distal bouton. Then, excess distal DCVs undergo dynactin-dependent retrograde transport back through proximal boutons into the axon. Just before re-entering the soma, DCVs again reverse for another round of anterograde axonal transport. While circulating over long distances, both anterograde and retrograde DCVs are captured sporadically in en passant boutons. Therefore, vesicle circulation, which includes long-range retrograde transport and inefficient bidirectional capture, overcomes the limitations of one-way anterograde transport to uniformly supply release sites with DCVs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Kvbeta subunits increase expression of Kv4.3 channels by interacting with their C termini.

Eun-Kyoung Yang; Mauricio R. Alvira; Edwin S. Levitan; Koichi Takimoto

Auxiliary Kvβ subunits form complexes with Kv1 family voltage-gated K+ channels by binding to a part of the N terminus of channel polypeptide. This association influences expression and gating of these channels. Here we show that Kv4.3 proteins are associated with Kvβ2 subunits in the brain. Expression of Kvβ1 or Kvβ2 subunits does not affect Kv4.3 channel gating but increases current density and protein expression. The increase in Kv4.3 protein is larger at longer times after transfection, suggesting that Kvβ-associated channel proteins are more stable than those without the auxiliary subunits. This association between Kv4.3 and Kvβ subunits requires the C terminus but not the N terminus of the channel polypeptide. Thus, Kvβ subunits utilize diverse molecular interactions to stimulate the expression of Kv channels from different families.

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Koichi Takimoto

Nagaoka University of Technology

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Chaoming Zhou

University of Pittsburgh

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Weiping Han

University of Pittsburgh

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Danqing Li

University of Pittsburgh

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Dinara Bulgari

University of Pittsburgh

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Elias Aizenman

University of Pittsburgh

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John P. Horn

University of Pittsburgh

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